Abstract

Generating electricity from a salinity gradient, known as osmotic power, provides a sustainable energy source, but it requires precise nanoscale control of membranes for maximum performance. Here, we report an ultrathin membrane, where molecule-specific short-range interactions enable giant gateable osmotic power with a record high power density (2 kW/m2 for 1 M∥1 mM KCl). Our membranes are charge-neutral two-dimensional polymers synthesized from molecular building blocks and operate in a Goldilocks regime that simultaneously maintains high ionic conductivity and permselectivity. Molecular dynamics simulations quantitatively confirm that the functionalized nanopores are small enough for high selectivity through short-range ion-membrane interactions and large enough for fast cross-membrane transport. The short-range mechanism further enables reversible gateable operation, as demonstrated by polarity switching of osmotic power with additional gating ions.

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